Re: The patient dog gets the fattest bone

: : : What is the origin and meaning of the phrase 'The patient dog eats the fatteth (or is it fattest?) bone'?

: : It appears to be "an African saying." It is called that on a Website devoted to Michael Jackson, see:

: : http://www.mjjresurrection.com/mjjrpressreleases.htm

: : But it also appears in the blogs or posts of some African authors, always identified, if at all, as a saying. It probably has to do with the behavior of dogs in wild packs, but perhaps not. It may not be true, but without knowing the exact origin it's impossible to say.

: : The message is something like: Patience has its own reward, whether it's the fattest bone or some other triumph. Patience in the face of adversity will be rewarded.

: : The superlative (e.g., fattest) can be achieved by adding the -est suffix, unless there is already an established superlative form. The -th or -eth suffix is used in ordinal numbers, except where an alternative already exists (as in first, second and third). : : SS

: That saying never really made much sense to me. I thought they were going with the "patience is a virtue" angle but it seems counter intuitive. I can imagine that the patient dog is the one who goes hungry. The patient one may get the bone (after the not so patient ones eat all the meat)

Equally counter-intuitive is the saying, "Blessed be the meek, for they shall inherit the earth." My geology professor, on the other hand, contended that when and if the humans self-destructed, it would be the snails that inherited the earth. SS